pcore patient portal

by Prof. Arlie Padberg 7 min read

Patient Portal - New Hampshire - Core Physicians

19 hours ago PCORI Online is now open for: Cycle 2 2022 Letters of Intent: Broad Pragmatic Studies and Methods. Cycle 3 2022 Letters of Intent: Broad Pragmatic Studies and Methods. >> Go To The Portal


What is patient portal and how does it work?

PCORI Online is now open for: Cycle 2 2022 Letters of Intent: Broad Pragmatic Studies and Methods. Cycle 3 2022 Letters of Intent: Broad Pragmatic Studies and Methods.

How do I enroll in the core physicians patient portal?

Patient Portal Login. Login. User name. Password. Forgot Password? Portal Admin Login. Remember me? Sign In ...

What does pcore do?

Welcome to your Patient Portal. Get started by verifying your access code, which you can find in the email, text, or print-out your provider gave you.

What is the secure patient portal (spp)?

Test results can be accessed and reviewed through your patient portal. If you’re having issues locating your patient portal, the portal locator will help you find it. If you’re having issues logging into your patient portal, please contact your medical provider’s office for support.

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What is patient portal?

Patient portals are secure websites where patients can view their health records, view test results, send messages to their doctor, and ask for prescription refills. Patients with chronic, or long-term, health problems such as asthma, diabetes, or heart disease must often coordinate their care across different doctors in multiple locations.

How does a patient portal help?

Article Highlight: Access to a patient portal can increase engagement in outpatient visits by patients with diabetes and those with multiple complex chronic conditions, according to a PCORI-funded study spotlighted recently in PLOS One. The study showed that portal use was associated with significantly fewer emergency room visits and preventable hospital stays for patients with multiple complex conditions. By increasing patient office visits, a portal could potentially help clinicians address unmet clinical needs and reduce health events that lead to emergency and hospital care. The observational study compared visit rates for 165,000 patients with and without portal access in a large healthcare system that implemented a patient portal.

What is the objective of a patient portal?

Objective 1: no follow-up for study outcomes. Objective 2: 2-year follow-up for study outcomes. Patient portals are secure websites where patients can access their health records. In this study, researchers, patients, clinicians, and other health system staff collaborated to design a survey to understand the drivers of and barriers ...

What is a peer review in PCORI?

Peer review of PCORI-funded research helps make sure the report presents complete, balanced, and useful information about the research . It also assesses how the project addressed PCORI’s Methodology Standards. During peer review, experts read a draft report of the research and provide comments about the report. These experts may include a scientist focused on the research topic, a specialist in research methods, a patient or caregiver, and a healthcare professional. These reviewers cannot have conflicts of interest with the study.

TOL Secure Patient Portal

The TOL Patient Portal (also referred to as "TRICARE Online" or "TOL") is the current secure patient portal that gives registered users access to online health care information and services at military hospitals and clinics.

MHS GENESIS Patient Portal

MHS GENESIS is the new secure patient portal for TRICARE. It will eventually deploy to all military medical and dental facilities worldwide and replace the TOL Patient Portal.

Using MHS GENESIS and TOL Together

If you’re already a registered user on the TOL Secure Patient Portal, MHS GENESIS works much the same way.

Log in to your Secure Patient Portal

If your military hospital or clinic uses TOL, click here to log in: >>TRICARE Online

800-538-9552

To create ant then access the MHS GENESIS Patient Portal, visit https://patient.mhsgenesis.health.mil

What are the chief benefits of MHS GENESIS?

MHS GENESIS is the first Department of Defense-wide electronic health record to be used by all military treatment facilities. By the time that MHS GENESIS is fully implemented throughout all of the DoD, patients will be able to receive care from any military treatment facility knowing that their health records will follow them.

How is MHS GENESIS different from CAL MED's current electronic health record systems?

Like all Army military treatment facilities, CAL MED currently uses several electronic health record systems for inpatient records, outpatient records, emergency room records, and other areas of care. While care teams can view patients' records in the different systems, this requires extra time to navigate all of the records.

What will I notice about what's new with MHS GENESIS?

The primary difference that patients will notice is the Patient Portal. While receiving care at MTFs which use MHS GENESIS, patients will no longer use RelayHealth and Tricare Online except for limited functions, such as requesting new providers.

When will I be able to start using the MHS GENESIS Patient Portal?

While patients may be able to log on to the Patient Portal and explore it during the weeks leading up to the transition to MHS GENESIS, the Patient Portal will not be active until September 7, 2019.

When patients move, will their new military treatment facilities be using MHS GENESIS?

The Department of Defense has a multi-year plan for all military treatment facilities to transition to MHS GENESIS. CAL MED is in the second wave of military treatment facility to transition to MHS GENESIS.

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What Was The Research About?

  • Patient portals are secure websites where patients can view their health records, view test results, send messages to their doctor, and ask for prescription refills. Patients with chronic, or long-term, health problems such as asthma, diabetes, or heart disease must often coordinate their care across different doctors in multiple locations. Patient portals may be especially helpful for t…
See more on pcori.org

What Were The Results?

  • The research team found that patients with chronic health problems who were younger or white were more likely than others to use the patient portal. Among patients who said they didn’t use the portal, the most common reasons were 1. Wanting to get care in person or by phone (54 percent) 2. Not often using a computer with access to the internet (41 percent) 3. Being unsure of what w…
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Who Was in The Study?

  • The study included adults with chronic health problems. In the first part of the study, the research team surveyed 1,824 patients. Of these patients, 56 percent were white, 13 percent were Asian, 10 percent were black, and 10 percent were Hispanic. About 12 percent of patients were 18–44 years old, and the rest were older. In the second part of the study, the team reviewed patient portal an…
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What Did The Research Team do?

  • The research team worked with patients, doctors, and other health system staff to design a patient survey. The survey asked patients about the reasons they did or didn’t use the portal. The team mailed the survey to patients in the health system and analyzed the results. The research team also looked at the patient portal and health records of patients in the health system. Using …
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What Were The Limits of The Study?

  • The study took place in a single health system in California with an established, free patient portal. Results may be different in other health systems. Also, results may be different for patients who must pay to use a portal. Results may also differ for patients who don’t have chronic health problems. Finally, the research team can’t say for sure if patients’ use of the portal caused the di…
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How Can People Use The Results?

  • Patients can use the results to learn more about how using a patient portal might affect healthcare experiences. People who run healthcare systems could use the results to help decide whether to provide portals for patients with chronic health problems.
See more on pcori.org